| Introduction to CORBA (tutorial session) |
| Full text |
Pdf
(43 KB)
|
| Source
|
International Conference on Software Engineering
archive
Proceedings of the 22nd international conference on Software engineering
table of contents
Limerick, Ireland
Page: 822
Year of Publication: 2000
ISBN:1-58113-206-9
|
|
Author
|
|
Steve Vinoski
|
Chief Architect, IONA Technologies, 200 West St., Waltham, MA
|
|
| Sponsors |
|
| Publisher |
|
| Bibliometrics |
Downloads (6 Weeks): 12, Downloads (12 Months): 114, Citation Count: 1
|
|
|
ABSTRACT
This tutorial provides the basics that developers need to begin understanding the Common Object Request Broker Architecture (CORBA) and using it to write industrial-strength distributed systems. You will learn about the basics of the Object Management Group's (OMG) Object Management Architecture (OMA), with a focus on its CORBA component. By the end of the tutorial, you will understand how to write object interface specifications using the OMG Interface Definition Language (IDL), how to write simple distributed applications in C++, how to use the Portable Object Adapter (POA), the Dynamic Invocation Interface (DII) and the Dynamic Skeleton Interface (DSI), and the Interface Repository (IFR). You will also know the basics of several CORBA services such as Naming, Trading, and Events.
REFERENCES
Note: OCR errors may be found in this Reference List extracted from the full text article. ACM has opted to expose the complete List rather than only correct and linked references.
| |
1
|
|
| |
2
|
Object Management Group. 1999. The Common Object Request Broker: Architecture and Specification. Revision2.3.1. ftp://ftp.omg.org/pub/docs/formal/ 99-10-07.pdf. Framingham, MA: Object Management Group.
|
Peer to Peer - Readers of this Article have also read:
-
Data structures for quadtree approximation and compression
Communications of the ACM
28, 9
Hanan Samet
-
A hierarchical single-key-lock access control using the Chinese remainder theorem
Proceedings of the 1992 ACM/SIGAPP Symposium on Applied computing
Kim S. Lee
, Huizhu Lu
, D. D. Fisher
-
The GemStone object database management system
Communications of the ACM
34, 10
Paul Butterworth
, Allen Otis
, Jacob Stein
-
Putting innovation to work: adoption strategies for multimedia communication systems
Communications of the ACM
34, 12
Ellen Francik
, Susan Ehrlich Rudman
, Donna Cooper
, Stephen Levine
-
An intelligent component database for behavioral synthesis
Proceedings of the 27th ACM/IEEE Design Automation Conference on
Gwo-Dong Chen
, Daniel D. Gajski
|